What is a performance-cruising sailboat? Positive responses to each of
the following questions define the answer. (1) Is the boat seakindly- or does it have an
easy motion in a seaway? (2) Can one person or a couple handle the boat and achieve good
performance without the weight of a lot of crew on the rail? (3) Does the boat perform
well enough so that its crew will prefer to sail rather than power or
motorsail?
In my admittedly subjective view, for my wife Lucia, and me, sailing aboard Pipe Dream
IX on the three-day Ecuador-to-Galapagos leg of the EXPO 98 Round-the-World Rally,
the answers to the above were in the affirmative. Lucia and I were together on watches,
3,000-square-foot spinnaker and all, and off-watch we slept in comfort in the double berth
in the forward owners stateroom, air-conditioning and all. Pipe Dream, loaded with
necessities and spares to last to Australia and beyond, crossed the finish line second in
the seven-boat non-motoring division, corrected out to third, and won the American section
of the cruising division , which allows powering with a time penalty. Sailing upwind in
the prevailing light air, most of the boats in the rally had to crank up their diesels to
keep up with us.
When considering any performance-cruising boat, its worth asking two questions:
Will I feel safe and comfortable going to sea in this boat? Am I going to have fun sailing
this boat in the cruising mode? Speed is desirable when cruising, simply because going
from point A to B under sail is what its all about. If you tack up a shoreline at
the same speed as those plodding under "iron geona" into the wind, waves, and
current offshore, then you have a performance cruiser. If you enjoy the serenity of
broad-reaching down the coast at nearly the same speed as boats that are
motorsailing,
then you are on a performance cruiser. But if you have to crank up the engine, even when
there is breeze, to make a decent days run, you are on a slow powerboat that happens
to have sails-in my opinion.
Where does performance come from? Length is most important. Average speed in knots for
the typical sailboat is roughly equivalent to the square root of its waterline length.
Hence a boat with a 36-foot waterline length should sail at about 6 knots under
"cruising canvas"; a performance-cruiser should be able to exceed this pace in
all but very light winds.
True performance-cruisers most often have fin keels and spade rudders. This underbody
configuration provides many performance advantages, including less wetted surface (and
thus reduced drag), greater efficiency sailing to windward (in the form of better
pointing), and greater steering control and maneuverability. Reduced drag means the boat
does not need as much sail or as large a rig to achieve speed under sail, and upwind
efficiency means faster passages.
Traditional heavy-displacement cruisers with full-length keels can overcome their speed
disadvantage only with a much larger sailplan. More sail requires heavier deck hardware
for the higher rig loads and more hands on deck in heavy weather-just what cruisers
dont want. A sailplan that can be handled by one or two people in any condition is
crucial not only to passagemaking performance but to crew comfort-otherwise sailing can
become an unwanted chore. On most performance-cruising boats under 60 feet in length, a
sail area-to-displacement ratio of 16 to 22 can usually provide the required power and an
easy to handle sailplan.
A cruising sailboats performance also depends on stability, or
"stiffness"-the ability of the boat to resist the heeling force of the sails.
Good all-around speed is possible only if the boat is stiff; a stiff boat can carry more
sail and heel less in a breeze than a tender boat. Stiffness can be achieved through a
wide beam at the waterline or through a low vertical center of gravity (VCG). If stiffness
comes from a wide waterline beam, the boats motion tends to be bouncy and abrupt in
waves; as soon as this type of boat heels, it usually exhibits excessive weather helm and
may be difficult to steer. Because such a boat tends to have a high center of gravity,
good speed can be achieved only by placing crew weight or movable ballast, such as water,
to windward to reduce heel.
The most important characteristic of a performance cruiser is that its stiffness be
derived from a low center of gravity. This is indicated by a simple ratio of righting
moment (RM) at 1 degree of heel to the cube of the greatest beam at the waterline (B). The
RM/B^3 ratio indicates whether the boat derives its stability more from its low VCG
(RM)
or from its large beam, or waterplane inertia (B^3). The greater the number yielded by
this ratio, the greater the stability, seakindliness, sail-carrying ability, and potential
performance of the boat. Boats with a high RM/B^3 tend to be longer, narrower, and faster
than boats with a lower RM/B^3. Based on a sample of 219 different IMS-rated cruising
boats in the United States from 22 to 81 feet in length, the median value of
RB/B^3 for
the stiffest 50 boats is 1.7. The median value of RM/B^3 for the most tender 50 boat is
.89. The average length/beam (LWL/B) ratio for the top group is 3.82, and only 2.96 for
the bottom group.
A high or low rating on this index is independent of a boats displacement/length
(D/L) ratio. The 50 boats highest on the RM/B^3 scale have a D/L ratio ranging from 55
(light) to 339 (heavy). (In modern terms, a D/L ratio of less than 180 is light, 180-280
is moderate, and above 280 is heavy.) Thus, 16 of the top 50 boats on the RB/B^3 scale are
heavy, 16 are moderate, and 18 are light. At the bottom of the scale half of the bottom 50
are heavy, 19 are moderate, and only 6 are light.
The preponderance of heavy-displacement boats at the low end of the scale reflects a
modern trend in cruising sailboats toward increased accommodations and decreased
ballast/displacement ratios-a trend that has raised the height of the center of gravity of
this type of boat. Forty-two of the 50 stiffest boats on the RM/B^3 scale, (but only 22 of
the less-stiff boats), have sail area-to-displacement ratios of over 16-what I consider to
be a minimum for performance cruising speed under sail.
Finally, the RM/B^3 ratio is an excellent predictor of "big-boat feel" and
motion in any size boat- the quality is just harder to achieve in a smaller lighter boat.
Whether light or heavy, a narrow boat with a low center of gravity will have a rock solid
feel, an easy motion, and positive control-the unmistakable aura of power, stability, and
passagemaking speed.
-Rodney S. Johnstone